Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 21 March 1889 — ABOUT DOCTORS’ BILLS. [ARTICLE]
ABOUT DOCTORS’ BILLS.
Many a struggling family has all it can doCto kesrp the wolf from the door, withoojt being called upon to pay frequent and' exorbitant bills for medical advice and attendance. ’ True, the doctor is often a necessary, though expensive visitant of the family circle; nevertheless,pare and well tested remedies-like Warner’s Safe Cure—keptou fiand for use when required, will do found a paying investment for every household in the land. Sickness is one of the legacies of life, and yet every ill that flesh iB heir to has an antidote in the laboratory of natnre. Hon, H. H. Warner, of Rochester, N. "Y., President of the Chamber of Commeroe of that city, was a few years ago stricken with kidney disease, which the physicians declared incurable. In this extremity, a friend recommended to him a vegetable preparation' now known throughout the civilized world as Warner’s Safe Cure. He trieci it, and was quickly restored to perfect health. The incident led him to begin the manufacture of the wonderful preparation, and to make its merits known in ail tongues and among all peoples.
He has now laboratories and warehouses in the United States not only, but in Canada, England, Germany, Austria, Australia and Burmah. His preparations meet the requirements and effect the cure of a variety ofts diseases, and are all compounded from medicfhal plants of the highest virtue. Mr. Warner is a man of affairs, wealth, culture and the highest standing in his own city and throughout the State. His character is the best guarantee of the purity and excellence of his renowned remedies which may be found in every first-class drug store of Europe and America. , The are called the upper crußt because they are usually “on the loaf.”
